Esa-Pekka Salonen conducts Mussorgsky’s Khovanshchina
aug.
23
Friday 17:00
EVENT DATE PASSED
Concert version of Mussorgsky’s dark, dramatic opera Khovanshchina. It is set at the end of the 17th century, at the beginning of Peter I´s reign, before the young tsar has come of age – the stage is set for a power struggle. The combatants are the military against the tsar, orthodox against reformed religion, east against west. There are magnificent choral parts and powerful personas, including the young widow Marfa, one of the most gripping mezzo-soprano parts in the history of opera.
The opera is subtitled in Swedish by a text machine in the concert hall. You can also get the subtitles in English directly on your phone via the Subtitle Mobile app. More information will be sent to concert ticket holders before the performance.
Participants
-
Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra
The Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra is the orchestra of the Finnish Broadcasting Company, Yle. Its mission is to produce and promote Finnish musical culture. The initial radio orchestra, with ten players, was founded in 1927. In the 1960s, the orchestra grew to full symphonic proportions. The FRSO’s concerts are broadcast live on Yle’s TV and radio channels, online at Yle Areena, as well as in pre-recorded, later television broadcasts.
Nicholas Collon is the orchestra’s chief conductor as of autumn 2021. Former chief conductors have been Toivo Haapanen, Nils-Eric Fougstedt, Paavo Berglund, Okko Kamu, Leif Segerstam, Jukka-Pekka Saraste, Sakari Oramo, and Hannu Lintu.
Contemporary Finnish music is a major item in the repertoire of the FRSO, which each year premieres several Yle commissions. Another of the orchestra’s tasks is to record all Finnish orchestral music for the Yle archive. The FRSO has recorded works by composers such as György Ligeti, Péter Eötvös, Carl Nielsen, Kimmo Hakola, Christian Lindberg, Kaija Saariaho och Esa-Pekka Salonen. It’s records have received prestigious awards such as the Gramophone Award, MIDEM Classical Award, and by the BBC Music Magazine.
-
Tapiola Chamber Choir
Since its inception in 1983, Tapiola Chamber Choir has been in the top tier of the Finnish choral scene. Hailing from Espoo, the choir has been led by Eric-Olof Söderström and Juha Kuivanen, with its current artistic director, Hannu Norjanen, having held the position since 1998. Guest conductors on various projects have included, among others, Harry Christophers, Paul Hillier and Peter Schreier. The choir’s repertoire ranges from baroque to contemporary music, with a special emphasis on romantic and newer material.
The choir performs a handful of concerts a year in the greater Helsinki metropolitan area, and travels in Finland as well as abroad. It has toured the United States, Germany, Denmark, Sweden, and Taiwan. The choir also cooperates regularly with top orchestras, including the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Tapiola Sinfonietta and the Finnish Baroque Orchestra, and is a regular performer in concert projects at the Helsinki Festival.
Over the years, Tapiola Chamber Choir has commissioned several new choral works from composers such as Kaija Saariaho, Jaakko Mäntyjärvi, Jouni Kaipainen, Erkki-Sven Tüür and Veljo Tormis. They have released several dozen recordings, including the complete a cappella works of Toivo Kuula, Jean Sibelius and Leevi Madetoja for mixed choir, as well as notable works by Jaakko Mäntyjärvi, Krzysztof Penderecki, and Kaija Saariaho.
-
Dominante
Dominante is made up of 60 singers, most of them students or alumni of the Aalto University. It was founded in 1975 as a student choir within the university, then called the Helsinki University of Technology. Dominante’s principal activities are performing ambitious a cappella works and orchestral classics, as well as yearly overseas concert tours, festivals, and competitions.
Seppo Murto is the choir’s Artistic Director since 1981. Having worked with the choir from practically the very beginning, Murto has developed the choir into one of Finland’s top mixed choirs with a solid reputation abroad through its frequent concert tours. Recent guest performances include the festivals Young Artists Bayreuth, Leipzig Bach Festival and Taipei International Choral Festival.
In the past decade alone, Dominante has commissioned and premiered ten new works from eight contemporary composers. Choral classics by Finnish composers such as Jean Sibelius and Toivo Kuula also hold a prominent place in the choir’s repertoire. Dominante frequently collaborates with orchestras such as the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Finnish Baroque Orchestra and Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra. In addition to great classics, it has performed less common works such as contemporary composer Jussi Chydenius’ De profundis. Dominante has appeared on more than 20 recordings, several of them critically acclaimed across Europe and in Finland.
-
The Helsinki Chamber Choir
The Helsinki Chamber Choir is a professional chamber choir that frequently appears at festivals in Finland and internationally and collaborates with orchestras, period-instrument ensembles, and contemporary music groups. Its concerts are regularly broadcast on radio and television and has also appeared on the European ARTE channel. The choir was founded in 1962 as the Finnish Radio Chamber Choir and assumed its current name in 2005.
Professor Nils Schweckendiek has served as Artistic Director of the Helsinki Chamber Choir since 2007, when he succeeded the composer Kimmo Hakola. The choir’s wide-ranging repertoire includes music from medieval times to the present day. It is particularly highly regarded for its work with new music. It regularly commissions new works and has given over 80 world premieres since 2005, as well as more than 30 Finnish first performances. It performs in formations ranging from one to 32 singers.
In regularly collaborates with several highly profiled international record labels. Together with its Artistic Director Nils Schweckendiek, it won a Grammy Award 2024 in the Best Choral Performance category for the disc Kaija Saariaho: Reconnaissance. The choir also featured on the 2010 Grammy-nominated recording of Magnus Lindberg’s Graffiti with the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra and Sakari Oramo. It has received and been nominated for numerous other international, prestigious awards.
-
Esa-Pekka Salonen, Conductor Laureate
Esa-Pekka Salonen is known the world over as both a composer and a conductor. His restless innovation drives him constantly to reposition classical music in the 21st century. He is currently the Music Director of the San Francisco Symphony, where he works alongside eight Collaborative Partners from a variety of disciplines, ranging from composers to roboticists. He is the Conductor Laureate of three world-renowned orchestras: the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra, where he served as Music Director from 1985 until 1995; the Los Angeles Philharmonic, where he was Music Director from 1992 until 2009; and the Philharmonia Orchestra, where he was Principal Conductor & Artistic Advisor from 2008 until 2021. Salonen also co-founded the annual Baltic Sea Festival, and served as its Artistic Director from 2003 until 2018.
Since joining the San Francisco Symphony, Salonen has worked to expand and embrace the possibilities of the orchestra, looking toward the future of classical music and its audience. Salonen’s 2023/24 season includes world premieres of Jesper Nordin’s violin concerto Convergences with Pekka Kuusisto, Anders Hillborg’s Piano Concerto with Emanuel Ax, and Jens Ibsen’s Drowned in Light, all of them with the San Francisco Symphony.
From 2015 to 2018, Salonen was Composer in Residence at the New York Philharmonic. He was the Berliner Philharmoniker’s Composer in Residence of the 2022/23 season. In October 2023, he led the Los Angeles Philharmonic in the world premiere of a short new work composed in celebration of the 20th anniversary of the Walt Disney Concert Hall. The 2023/24 season also sees Salonen lead his Sinfonia concertante for organ and orchestra with the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra and Philadelphia Orchestra, with Olivier Latry appearing as a soloist with both orchestras.
Esa-Pekka Salonen has received numerous major awards, including the UNESCO Rostrum for the work Floof, the Grawemeyer Award for his Violin Concerto, and the Nemmers Composition Prize. He has been awarded the royal Swedish medal Litteris et Artibus, the Pro Finlandia medal and Commander 1st Class of the Order of the Lion of Finland, and Officier des Arts et des Lettres by the French government. In 2020, he was appointed an honorary Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire.
-
Mika Kares bass, prince Ivan Khovansky
Mika Kares has established himself as an internationally sought-after bass with a vast repertoire covering the great Italian and German composers such as Verdi, Wagner, and Mozart, in addition to the most important roles of the Slavic and Finnish tradition. He regularly guests at the most renowned houses and festivals worldwide and has worked with conductors including Christian Thielemann, Teodor Currentzis, Nikolaus Harnoncourt, François-Xavier Roth, and Kent Nagano.
In the summer of 2024, Kares returned to three festivals: to Bayreuth as Hagen in Wagner’s Götterdämmerung), to Savonlinna as Zaccaria in Verdi’s Nabucco and Commendatore in Mozart’s Don Giovanni, and to Salzburg as La Roche in Strauss’ Capriccio. Furthermore, he sang in Verdi‘s Messa da Requiem with the Gewandhausorchester under Franz Welser-Möst. Last season’s engagements included his return to Chicago’s Lyric Opera as Daland in Wagner’s Der fliegende Holländer, Opéra National de Paris as Jacopo Fiesco in Verdi’s Simon Boccanegra, and Staatsoper Berlin as Ivan Khovansky in Mussorgsky’s Khovanshchina.
In addition, Mika Kares is sought-after as a concert singer, his broad repertoire including key works such as Mozart’s Requiem, Rossini’s Stabat Mater, Beethoven’s ninth symphony and Missa solemnis, as well as Mahler’s eighth and Shostakovich’s 13th and 14th symphonies. The live recording of Bartók’s Bluebeard’s Castle with the Helsinki Philharmonic, Susanna Mälkki and Kares in the lead role was nominated for a 2022 Grammy Award.
-
Tuomas Katajala tenor, prince Andrei Khovansky
Finnish singer Tuomas Katajala is a versatile and sought-after tenor who has achieved notable success as an opera singer and as a concert singer. He studied at the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki as well as in Rome and Amsterdam. Katajala has a long-standing and close relationship with the Finnish National Opera in Helsinki and the Savonlinna Opera Festival, where he made his stage debut as Tamino in Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte. He has worked with conductors including Vladimir Ashkenazy, Kent Nagano, Klaus Mäkelä, Pablo Heras-Kasado, Esa-Pekka Salonen and Susanna Mälkki.
In the 2023/24 season, he made role debuts as the lead in Wagner’s Lohengrin at the Savonlinna Opera Festival, as Erik in Der fliegende Holländer in Beijing, and as Chevalier de la Force in Poulenc’s Dialogues des Carmélites at the Finnish National Opera. He also performed Mahler’s Lied von der Erde at the opening concert of the Milano Symphony Orchestra at the Scala, an Lili Boulanger’s Faust et Heléne with the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra under Hannu Lintu.
Katajala’s operatic repertoire includes several Mozart roles: Ferrando in Così fan tutte, Don Ottavio in Don Giovanni, and Belmonte in Die Entführung aus dem Serail; additionally, Steuermann in Wagner’s Der fliegende Holländer, Max in Weber’s Der Freischütz, and Almaviva in Rossini’s The Barber of Seville. His concert and oratorio repertoire includes the key works by Bach, Handel, Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Bruckner, Mahler, and Britten, which he has performed in concerts in the United States, Europe, Scandinavia, and Japan.
-
Kristofer Lundin tenor, prince Vasily Golitsin
The Swedish tenor Kristofer Lundin replaces Giorgi Sturua in the role of Prince Vasiliy Golitsyn due to illness.
Lundin debuts this coming season at the Bergen National Opera as Graf Albert in Korngold’s Die tote Stadt, at the Opéra de Lyon as Prince Yamadori in Puccini’s Madama Butterfly, and at the Teatro di San Carlo as Zweiter Jude in Strauss’ Salome. He recently sang Prince Yamadori at the festival in Aix-en-Provence, the Holy Fool in Mussorgsky’s Boris Godunov in both Toulouse and Paris, as well as Buddy in the premiere of Andrea Tarrodi’s Sylvia with Piteå chamber opera.
Previously, Lundin has sung Heinrich der Schreiber in Wagner’s Tannhäuser at the Opéra de Lyon, Šapkin in Janáček’s From the House of the Dead at the Hessisches Staatstheater Wiesbaden, Peter Quint in Britten’s The Turn of the Screw at Folkoperan in Stockholm, and Macduff in Verdi’s Macbeth at Norrlandsoperan in Umeå. He debuted at the Salzburg Festival as Odoardo in Handel’s Ariodante. Kristofer Lundin graduated from the Stockholm University of the Arts, was a member of the Zurich Opera’s opera studio, and is an alumn of the Aix-en-Provence Mozart/Händel Academy.
-
Tomi Punkeri baritone, Fyodor Shlakovity
Baritone Tomi Punkeri has gained recognition with his dark, velvety voice and strong stage charisma. His operatic roles at the Copenhagen Royal Opera and in Finland include Dandini in Rossini’s La Cenerentola, Papageno in Mozart’s The Magic Flute, Schaunard in Puccini’s La Bohème, Ned Keene in Britten’s Peter Grimes, and Masetto in Mozart’s Don Giovanni. Punkeri has performed as a soloist with orchestras including the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Royal Danish Orchestra, Finnish Baroque Orchestra, and the Ostrobothnian Chamber Orchestra. The repertoire includes the major oratorios and passions by Bach, Mozart’s and Faurés Requiems, Haydn’s Missa in tempore belli, and Lieds including Schubert’s Die Schöne Müllerin and Winterreise.
Punkeri has received recognition in national and international singing competitions. In autumn 2023, he was awarded a special prize in the final of the Klaudia Taev competition. The same year, he was nominated for opera singer of the year in Denmark by CPHCulture. Other international competitions include the Hans Gabor Belvedere Singing Competition, Wigmore Hall International Song Competition, and the Concours musical international de Montréal. He has a master’s degree in music from the Royal Danish Opera Academy and was part of the Royal Danish Opera’s two-year Young Artist Programme in 2020–2022.
-
Nadezhda Karyazina mezzo-soprano, Marfa
Russian mezzo-soprano Nadezhda Karyazina is an up-and-coming opera singer whose recent highlights, besides touring as Marfa in Mussorgsky’s Khovanshchina with the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra and Esa-Pekka Salonen, includes Princess Clarisse in Prokofiev’s The Love for Three Oranges at Semperoper Dresden, Isabella in Rossini’s L’Italiana in Algeri and Eurydice in Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice at the Zürich Opera, and Hannah in Mieczysław Weinberg’s The Passenger at the Teatro Real in Madrid.
After graduating in musical theatre at the Academy of Theatrical Arts in Moscow, Karyazina began her studies at the Galina Vishnevskaya Opera Centre and then in the Bolshoi Theatre’s Young Artist Programme. In 2013–2015, she was a member of the London Royal Opera’s Jette Parker Artists Programme, singing roles such as Maddalena in Verdi’s Rigoletto and Mercedes in Bizet’s Carmen. In 2015, she joined the ensemble at the Staatsoper Hamburg, where her roles included Suzuki in Puccini’s Madama Butterfly, Rosina in Rossini’s The Barber of Seville and Cherubino in Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro.
-
Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke tenor, the Scribe
Austrian tenor Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke regularly appears at the major opera houses throughout Europe. His major roles include Mime in Wagner’s Das Rheingold and Siegfried, which he has performed at the Teatro alla Scala, Semperoper Dresden, De Nederlandse Opera, Tokyo’s Bunka Kaikan, Bayerische Staatsoper, Capitole de Toulose, to name a few. Also, Dr. Caius in Verdi’s Falstaff, Hauptmann in Berg’s Wozzeck, Herod in Strauss’ Salome and Valzacchi in Strauss’ Der Rosenkavalier are further roles to which he has returned. He also sang Klaus Narr in Pierre Audi’s staging of Schönberg’s Gurrelieder.
Ablinger-Sperrhacke has performed more than 130 times at the Glyndebourne Festival Opera, as well as performing at festivals including Baden-Baden, Aix-en-Provence, Bregenz, Lucerne, Salzburg, and Helsinki. He has worked with directors such as Krzysztof Warlikowski, Jürgen Flimm, Andreas Homoki, Simon McBurney and Michel Fau, and with conductors including Kirill Petrenko, Daniel Barenboim, Ingo Metzmacher, Franz Welser-Möst, Kent Nagano, and Esa-Pekka Salonen.
In 2021, he received the title of Bayerischer Kammersänger, and the next year, he was awarded both the title of Chevalier de l’ordre des Arts et Lettres and the Austrian medal Ehrenkreuz für Wissenschaft und Kunst. He studied at the Musikhochschule in Vienna and made his debut in 1997 at the Opéra Natoinal de Paris.
-
Olga Heikkilä soprano, Susanna
Versatile Finnish soprano Olga Heikkilä has graduated from the Helsinki Conservatory, Danish Royal Opera Academy, and the Sibelius Academy. Since 2017, she works on her artistical doctoral thesis À tour de Pierrot lunaire at the Sibelius-Academy where she explores the multitude of Sprechgesang or speak-singing. In recent years, she has also been busy with Kaija Saariaho’s acclaimed opera, Innocence, where Heikkilä initially performed a speaking-only role and then proceeded to learn another role. She has sung in Innocence at for instance De Nationale Opera & Ballet in Amsterdam.
She has appeared on stages in Helsinki, Copenhagen, Stuttgart, at the Aix-en-Provence festival, Staatsoper Berlin, La Monnaie in Brussels, and the Royal Opera House in London. She is a prize winner of several prestigious competitions, including in Kangasnieme and Villmanstrand in Finland, the Klaudia Taev Competition in Estonia, and the IVC in ‘s-Hertogenbosch in the Netherlands. She regularly performs with European and Finnish chamber orchestras under conductors such as Michael Boder, Eva Ollikainen, and Ingo Metzmacher.
-
Ain Anger bass, Dosifey
Estonian bass Ain Anger is a regular presence on the world’s most celebrated operatic and concert stages and was honoured as Kammersänger by the Austrian government in 2020. Since his 2004 house debut at Wiener Staatsoper as Monterone in Verdi’s Rigoletto, Anger has sung more than 40 roles there, including Dosifey in Mussorgsky’s Khovanshchina, König Heinrich in Wagner’s Lohengrin, Commendatore in Barrie Kosky’s Don Giovanni, and several principal Verdi roles including Zaccaria in Nabucco, Jacopo Fiesco in Simone Boccanegra, and Sparafucile in Rigoletto.
Anger’s 2023/24 season commitments included his return to Teatro alla Scala as Fiesco in Simone Boccanegra and Il grande Inquisitore in Don Carlo, as well as to Bayerische Staatsoper as Landgraf in Tannhäuser and Daland in Der fliegende Holländer. He returned also to Wiener Staatsoper as Gremin in Eugene Onegin, and in concert, he joined the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra and Jaap Van Zweden for performances of Der fliegende Holländer.
Other noteworthy recent performance include Mahler’s Symphony No. 8 with Riccardo Chailly at the Teatro alla Scala and with the NHK Symphony Orchestra and Paavo Järvi. Also, Verdi’s Messa da Requiem with the Orchestre Philharmonique de Strasbourg under Aziz Shokhakimov, and the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia with Daniel Oren. He has also performed in several productions at the Opéra National de Paris and the Bayerische Staatsoper.
-
Natalia Tanasii soprano, Emma
In the 2023/24 season, Moldovan soprano Natalia Tanasii returned to the Opernhaus Zürich as Micaëla in Andreas Homoki’s new production of Carmen conducted by Gianandrea Noseda. She also debuted at Staatsoper Hamburg as Mimì in Puccini’s La Bohème, a role she also sang at the National Theatre in Prague the same season. In the future, she will make her debut at the Teatro Real in Madrid and the Salzburg Easter Festival, and return to the Staatsoper Hamburg.
Recent successes also include Tatyana in Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin at La Monnaie in Brussels, Teatro Massimo di Palermo, Opéra Royal de Wallonie in Liège, Opéra de Lausanne, and at Garsington Opera. She debuted at the Volksoper Wien in the title role of Tchaikovsky’s Iolanta and at Oper Frankfurt as Micaëla in Carmen. She has also sung Fifth maid in Strauss’ Elektra in Zürich and Salzburg, and Mimì in La Bohème at the Teatro Nacional de São Carlos in Lisbon. In 2019, she was awarded the 2nd prize in the much-coveted international Neue Stimmen competition.
She received critical acclaim for her performance in Calixto Bieito’s staged production of Britten’s War Requiem at the Norwegian Opera & Ballet in Oslo and Teatro Arriaga in Bilbao. As a member of the Opernhaus Zürich’s opera studio 2017–2019 her roles included Sandman i Humperdinck’s Hänsel und Gretel, the title role in Massenet’s Manon, and Kate Pinkerton in Puccini’s Madama Butterfly.
-
Johan Krogius tenor, Kuzka
Finnish tenor Johan Krogius performed two roles at the 2024 Savonlinna Opera Festival: Don Ottavio in Mozart’s Don Giovanni and Isamele in Verdi’s Nabucco. In the 2024/25 season, his projects include Kuska in Mussorgsky’s Khovanshchina on a concert tour with the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra and Esa-Pekka Salonen, Joonas Kokkonen’s The Last Temptations at Tampere Opera, and Mozart’s Requiem at the Berlin Philharmonie. At the Staatsoper Unter den Linden he will make his role debuts as Tybalt in Gounod’s Roméo et Juliette and Erster Gralsritter in Wagners Parsifal, as well as sing Innkeeper in Wagner’s Der Rosenkavalier.
In 2021, Krogius won the Timo Mustakallio singing competition and was awarded 1st place at the Helsinki Lied competition in the same year. As of the 2022/23 season, he is a member of the International Opera Studio at Staatsoper Unter den Linden, where he has already sung roles in Der Rosenkavalier, Mozart’s Idomeneo and Die Zauberflöte, Puccini’s La Bohème, and Verdi’s Rigoletto, among others. Last season, his roles at the Staatsoper included Leukippos in Strauss’ Daphne, and Streshnev in Mussorgky’s Khovanshchina.
His concert repertoire includes works of baroque and renaissance music, lied and oratorio. He works with institutions such as the Jyväskylä Sinfonia, the Helsinki Baroque Orchestra, the Tapiola Sinfonietta, and the Turku Philharmonic Orchestra.
-
Elias Brown, assistant conductor
Elias Peter Brown works as a conductor, composer, improviser, and curator, seeking to create meaningful spaces for listening in and out of the concert hall. He was named a Salonen Fellow for 2023/24, where was personally mentored by Esa-Pekka Salonen and served as assistant conductor at the San Francisco Symphony, while also working as assistant conductor with the Colburn Conservatory Orchestra in the Nagaunee Conducting Program.
He was previously assistant conductor of the Korean National Symphony Orchestra in Seoul during the 2022/23 season, after winning First Prize as well as the Orchestra Prize at the Korean International Conducting Competition. He is supported as a Stipendiat of the Conducting Forum of the Germany Music Council and is the two-time recipient of a Solti Foundation US Career Assistance Award. He has recently worked with orchestras such as the Symphonieorkest Vlaanderen, BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Orchestra of the Komische Oper Berlin, and Kammerorchester Basel. He has participated in masterclasses with David Zinman, Johannes Schlaefli, Kristiina Poska, Marin Alsop, and others.
Outside of conducting, he has been mentored as a music curator through the Sounds Now program at Onassis Stegi, and his work as composer has been performed at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London, Krama Festival in Athens, and the Contemporary Art Centre in Vilnius.
-
Tuomas Norvio, sound design
Tuomas Norvio is a sound designer and sound artist with a background in electronic music. He is currently active within different genres and artistic expressions. He is interested in masses of sound and in manipulating acoustic and concrete elements, and works with everything from recording and production to composition and arranging. He is a permanent artist-in-residence at the Tero Saarinen Company.
Norvio has created music and sound for dance performances, modern circus, multidisciplinary works, installations, as well as for other artists. He performs live electronics together with Hildá Länsman and is part of the ensemble Pohjonen Alanko. Norvio has collaborated with artists and musicians such as Johanna Nuutinen, Tero Saarinen, Kimmo Pohjonen, Tapani Rinne, defunensemble, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Thom Monckton and Sari Palmgren. He has been received the Säde honorary award as well as the Teosto Prize.
-
Gerard McBurney, director
Gerard McBurney is a British composer, writer, and deviser, working in theater, radio, television, and concert hall. His collaborators include Sir Mark Elder and the Hallé, the Southbank and Barbican Centres, Lincoln Center, the festivals in Lucerne and Aix-en-Provence, and several internationally renowned orchestras. He has directed productions of Felix Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Edward Elgar’s The Dream of Gerontius, the massive Genesis Suite created by seven composers, Alban Berg’s Wozzeck, among others.
McBurney has researched and presented documentary films on subjects including Sergei Rachmaninov, Hildegard of Bingen, Gaetano Donizetti, and Mark Anthony Turnage. Between 1982 and 2006, he was a well-known profile on BBC Radio 3. For over a decade, he worked with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra as Artistic Programming Advisor, among other things being involved in its successful Beyond the Score project. As a composer, he has written orchestral and chamber music, theatre pieces, songs and choral music. Notable works include the ballet White Nights, community chamber opera The Airman’s Tale, and chamber pieces Desire and Stones and Trees.
After two years as a postgraduate student at the Moscow Conservatory, McBurney has had a particular interest in Russian music. This has led to projects including reconstructions of lost or forgotten pieces by Dmitri Shostakovich, such as the opera Orango from 1932, music hall show Hypothetically Murdered from 1931, and a second jazz suite from 1938. The reimagining of Modest Mussorgsky’s epic opera Khovanshchina is his latest large project.
-
Charlotte McBurney, assistant director
Charlotte McBurney had her major international breakthrough in her debut as Amicia, the lead role in acclaimed 2019 video game A Plague Tale: Innocence. She returned to the role in its sequel, A Plague Tale: Requiem three years later. In 2023, she was nominated for the prestigious BAFTA award for performer in a leading role for her performance in Requiem. The same year, she performed the role as Young Jill in another acclaimed video game, Final Fantasy XVI. She has also acted in short films. McBurney started taking acting lessons after school as a 14-year-old and was discovered by talent scouts at the Young Actress Theatre in London.
-
Hannu Norjanen, choir master
Programme
Concert length: 3 h 30 mins with interval
-
Mussorgsky’s Khovanshchina
3 h
The plot of is based on historical events. The first half begins in Moscow’s famous Red Square by the Kremlin, early one morning in the middle of the so-called Khovansky Uprising of 1682. The violently ambitious Prince Ivan Khovansky and his loyal militia, the Streltsy (‘musketeers’ or ‘shooters’), have perpetrated a violent massacre the night before and the streets are still running with blood. Khovansky and his followers are excited to move their project forward, but they need allies and, in the second act, he meets with two bitter rivals.
Prince Golitsyn is a military commander of western tastes and styles, close to the Tsarevna Sophia, and who plans to help her rule as a regent while her two younger brothers – including her half-brother Peter – are still minors. Dosifey, another quite different prince, has renounced all modern forms of government and plans to transform Russia into a medieval society based on traditional religious values. The three men argues furiously until it is revealed that their plot has been discovered and they retreat to their separate strongholds.
The one absolutely ahistorical character in this drama is Marfa, the main female role, whom we meet in every act of the opera. For Mussorgsky, who invented her, she was the true centre of his drama. She supports Dosifei in his religious views, but has also had a passionate sexual affair with Khovansky’s evil son, Andrei, and is also a pagan seer used by Prince Golitsyn as a fortune-teller, believing she can reveal his future to him. At a critical point, Golitsyn calls her a ‘shape-shifter’, and indeed she is like a figure from a fairy-tale: sometimes evil, sometimes good; one time a lover, the next a cruel tormentor; both natural and supernatural. She is a truly wonderful conception, a kind of Russian ‘Lulu’ or ‘Lorelei’.
The second half of the drama begins in what in reality was seven years later, in 1689, when Peter the Great seized power from his half-sister Sophia. But Mussorgsky cunningly elides these two events so as to make it seem that the second flows directly from the first. It begins with Khovansky’s Streltsy regiment celebrating their unrestricted power with a violent drunken rampage, when they are suddenly interrupted with news that Tsar Peter has ordered foreign mercenaries to destroy them.
Terrified, they appeal to Prince Khovansky to save them, but he refuses, telling them that their time has come and gone, and they must now prepare themselves to be destroyed. The prince retreats into his palace to console himself with music, drinking and erotic dancing by his female house-slaves. At the end of this scene, he is suddenly and spectacularly murdered by an emissary of the new young Tsar.
Back in the Red Square, where the opera began, we see Prince Golitsyn being taken off to life-long exile in the far north of the country, before the entire Streltsy regiment is led into the square for mass execution in front of jeering crowds. At the last moment, their lives are unexpectedly spared by Tsar Peter, who has other plans for them.
Deep in the forest, Dosifei and his followers, the Old Believers, refuse to be taken prisoner by the mercenaries of Tsar Peter. Instead, they prepare to commit mass-suicide by burning themselves alive inside their wooden church. Marfa, using her deep unearthly powers, has tricked the despicable young Prince Andrei to join her here in the forest and too late he realises with terror that he will now die with her in the consuming flames.
Gerard McBurney
About the concert
Mussorgsky is a composer of the deepest strangeness, power and originality. Unlike his great Russian contemporaries, Tchaikovsky and Rimsky-Korsakov, he had almost no professional training. Instead, he relied almost entirely on his incredible and instinctive ear, and on his formidable gifts as a pianist. He drew inspiration from ancient Russian folk and liturgical music, and – above all – from his beloved native Russian language.
Mussorgsky wanted most of all to tell a story: painting human pictures by weaving words, music and action seamlessly together. Like many Russian artists of his time – including Tchaikovsky, Dostoyevsky, and Repin – Mussorgsky wanted to create epic works that would examine and dramatize the brutal, unhappy destiny of his country. For him, this meant composing ‘chronicle-operas’, sprawling tragic dramas to explain why his country’s history had unfolded and still unfolds in its distinctively catastrophic way.
His first attempt at this form was his setting of Pushkin’s Boris Godunov, a Macbeth-like play about a tyrant who seized the throne of Russia in the late 16th century. Mussorgsky turned next to the so-called ‘Khovanshchina’, set nearly 100 years after the events of Boris Godunov: A number of rival warring parties, led by the violent and ruthless Prince Khovansky, attempted to take control of Russia, until they were utterly defeated by the young Peter the Great at the moment they thought they were on the verge of victory.
Mussorgsky researched deeply the complicated historical facts of this tumultuous period, then compressed them into a libretto of his own creation, a headlong narrative like a Hollywood epic, where events that really took place over several years are made to seem as though they took place almost on a single day.
Once he had written the words, he composed the music like a mosaic over a number of years, adding here and editing or changing there, as his imagination led him. The result was some of the greatest music he ever wrote, heart-rending in the depth of its feelings, devastating in the darkness of its pessimism, and everywhere shot through with the distinctive colours of his beloved church bells, priestly chants, and wistful folk-melodies.
But Mussorgsky never quite finished it. Nor did he orchestrate more than a tiny part of this huge score, which is written like a colossal song for voices and piano. The notorious cause of his failure was the alcoholism which killed him in 1881. His friend Rimsky-Korsakov made the first performing version, albeit full of cuts and corrections according to his own artistic tastes.
The great Serge Diaghilev dreamt of making a version closer to Mussorgsky’s intentions, and asked Ravel and Stravinsky to take on the job together. Of this version, all that survives is Stravinsky’s beautiful ending, written around the time of the first performance of The Rite of Spring in 1913.
In the late 1950s, Dmitri Shostakovich orchestrated Mussorgsky’s piano score. This version has been used for most performances since then. Sometime later, Stravinsky’s ending was rediscovered and is now frequently used in performances. Also, a number of lost sketches for the final scene have been rediscovered in Russian archives.
In this performance, you will hear Shostakovich’s orchestration of the main part of the score, Stravinsky’s eerie and beautiful ending, and – between them, like a kind of bridge – a new reconstruction of the long-lost sketches by the present writer. The idea was to give modern listeners a chance to experience what survives of Mussorgsky’s original thoughts, without competing with the achievements of Shostakovich and Stravinsky. To that end, it seemed extremely important to hear the fragments as scraps, incomplete remains, like jottings in a private diary, brought to life without destroying their fragmentary nature.
One idea was to float them on a newly created soundscape by distinguished sound-artist Tuomas Norvio. As the action of this final scene takes place deep in the ancient Russian forest, Norvio’s creation should gently conjure up that huge world of nature, the individual musical fragments emerging like breaths from within that world.
Also important was to bridge the very different styles of Shostakovich and Stravinsky. Shostakovich, writing from a lifetime of immersion in Mussorgsky’s music, created an orchestral canvas of incredible bleakness and grandeur. Stravinsky, on the other hand, worked in a different, earlier musical language and only from Mussorgsky’s verbal description of the intense mystical quietness that he wanted at the end of his opera.
The bridge of fragments should take us from Shostakovich’s musical world to that of Stravinsky, so that we experience in different ways how both these great composers were rooted in the amazing achievements of their predecessor, Modest Mussorgsky.
Gerard McBurney
aug.
23
Friday 17:00
EVENT DATE PASSED